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Columbia River Basin
- The Columbia River Basin is a region that includes parts of
Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Utah, Nevada and British
Columbia ? an area larger than France.
- The river and its tributaries are the dominant water system in the
Pacific Northwest.
- The Columbia River is 1,214 miles long.
- The Columbia River originates at Columbia Lake in British Columbia,
and about 25 percent of the river flow comes from Canada.
- The largest major tributary is the Snake River, which is 1,036 miles
long.
- The Columbia River is a snow-charged river that fluctuates
seasonally in volume.
- Average annual runoff at its mouth is about 198 million acre-feet.
- The highest volumes are between April and September. The lowest
volumes are from December to February.
- From its source at 2,650 feet above sea level, the river falls an
average of more than 2 feet per mile before reaching the ocean.
- Humans have lived along the river for more than 10,000 years, with a
large increase in population when the Euro-American settlers arrived
in the 1800s.
Map of the basin >
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